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Editor's
Note
A matter of
trust
Public
continues to regard nurses highly in honesty and ethics
Beth Ulrich, Ed.D., RN, South
Central Editor
December 17,
2001

The results
of the annual CNN/USA Today/Gallup poll ranking the American public's
perception of the honesty and ethical standards of professions were
released earlier this month. This year, firefighters and the military
were added to the list and were ranked first and third, respectively.
Nurses, who made the list for the first time three years ago, ranked
second. Police and pharmacists rounded out the top five.
In 1999, when
nurses were added to the poll, the profession instantly vaulted
to the top of the list, with 73 percent of respondents rating nurses'
honesty and ethical standards as high (53 percent) or very high
(20 percent). In 2000, nurses not only rated highest again, but
improved, with 79 percent of respondents rating them high (59 percent)
or very high (20 percent). It took the addition of firefighters
after the events of Sept. 11 for another profession to supplant
nurses from the top spot. Even so, nurses once again improved in
the public's perception, with 84 percent rating nurses' honesty
and ethical standards as high (57 percent) or very high (27 percent).
| Percentage
of respondents rating honesty and ethical standards as high
or very high |
|
1999
|
2000
|
2001
|
| Nurses |
73%
|
79%
|
84%
|
| Pharmacists |
69%
|
67%
|
68%
|
| MDs |
58%
|
63%
|
66%
|
Before the addition
of nurses, pharmacists had rated highest for 10 consecutive years.
In 2001, 68 percent of respondents rated the honesty and ethical
standards of pharmacists as high (53 percent) or very high (15 percent),
while 66 percent rated MDs as high (49 percent) or very high (17
percent).
The message
is clear: The American public trusts the honesty and ethical standards
of nurses, and their trust in us is increasing. That trust is an
honor, but an honor that also brings with it a duty to continue
to earn that trust. Of all the people who walk into patients' rooms
each day, the patients and families most often believe that nurses
will tell them the truth and that nurses' actions will reflect high
ethical standards.
A key area in
which the public (which includes our elected representatives and
their staffs) depends on nurses for information-and often direction-is
in legislation and regulation. In this issue of NURSEWEEK, we have
provided you with an overview of the major health care legislation
initiatives. Each of us has a duty to become familiar with what
each legislative initiative purports to accomplish, determine what
we believe it actually will accomplish, and then influence the people
who can achieve the outcomes that will best contribute to the public
good.
In a time of
professional turmoil, with patients getting sicker, the work becoming
more difficult and our seemingly eternal internal debates escalating,
it is refreshing to see that we have not only maintained-but increased-the
public's trust. The public may sometimes be confused about what
nurses do or how dependently or independently we practice our profession,
but they clearly know whom they trust with their lives. Not a bad
way to start the new year.
Visit www.gallup.com/poll/releases/pr011205.asp
for more information on the survey.
What
do you think?
Email us at
editor@nurseweek.com
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